Epigenetic markers of adverse lifestyle identified among night shift workers

Author:

Hulls Paige M.ORCID,McCartney Daniel L.,Bao Yanchun,Walker Rosie M.,de Vocht Frank,Martin Richard M.ORCID,Relton Caroline L.,Evans Kathryn L.,Kumari Meena,Marioni Riccardo E.,Richmond Rebecca C.

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundEpigenetic changes in the form of DNA methylation (DNAm) may act as biological markers of risk factors or adverse health states. We investigated associations between night shift work and established DNAm predictors of lifestyle, and compared them with those observed between night shift work and self-reported or conventionally-measured phenotypes.MethodsIn two cohort studies, Generation Scotland (GS) (n=7,028) and Understanding Society (UKHLS) (n=1,175), we evaluated associations between night shift work and four lifestyle factors (body mass index, smoking, alcohol, education) using both conventionally-measured phenotypes and DNA methylation-based scores proxying the phenotypes. DNA methylation-based measures of biological ageing were also generated using six established “epigenetic clocks”. Meta-analysis of GS and UKHLS results was conducted using inverse-variance weighted fixed effects.ResultsNight shift work was associated with higher BMI (0.79; 95%CI 0.02, 1.56; p=0.04) and lower education (−0.18; −0.30, −0.07; p=0.002). There was weak evidence of association between night shift work and DNAm scores for smoking (0.06, −0.03, 0.15; p=0.18) and education (−0.24; −0.49, 0.01; p=0.06) in fully adjusted models. Two of the epigenetic age measures demonstrated higher age acceleration among night shift workers (0.80; 0.42, 1.18; p<0.001 for GrimAge and 0.46; 0.00, 0.92; p=0.05 for PhenoAge).ConclusionsNight shift work is associated with phenotypic and DNAm-based measures of lower education. Night shift work was also related to DNAm predictors of smoking and ageing.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference35 articles.

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